Could momentum-stopping timeouts, a longtime staple in college basketball, come to college football?
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That could be a result if one of the new modifications to injury timeout rules proposed by the NCAA Football Rules Committee last week comes to fruition.
On Friday, the Rules Committee “recommended that if medical personnel enter the field to evaluate an injured player after the ball is spotted by the officiating crew for the next play, that player’s team would be charged a timeout.”
A five-yard delay-of-game penalty would be assessed if the team is out of timeouts.
The key words there are “spotted for play.” This proposal was likely made with Lane Kiffin‘s Ole Miss in mind. On several occasions during the 2024 season, a Rebel defender would fall to the turf at a given signal if the Ole Miss defense was on its heels and surrendering yards in chunks. It wasn’t limited to Ole Miss as other College Football Playoff teams used the strategy, but the Rebels were a repeat offender during the 2024 season and drew the most ire because of it.
The NCAA release continued, saying “the impetus for recommending this change is to provide an in-game mechanism that can curtail the faking of injuries because committee members think these actions negatively affect the overall perception of the game.”
Georgia head coach Kirby Smart, the co-chair of the Football Rules Committee, said the following in a press release: “The committee identified the time period after the ball has been spotted as the most egregious violations of the injury timeout rule and is addressing the issue this way. Having a set time frame of when the game is stopped for an injured player should hopefully help curtail the strategy of having players fake injuries.”
If the opportunity to stop play via feigned injury is no longer available, then coaches could look toward other methods in order to stifle their opponent’s momentum. One of those methods? Just to use the timeout.
This is common in college basketball, especially in the men’s game where teams have a “use it or lose it” timeout in the first half. It behooves a team to use that stoppage in order to recalibrate their defense and make sure that the bleeding stops.
Coaches view their timeouts as precious. They do only have three of them per half, after all. Plus, adjustments within a basketball huddle are easier to immediately apply than ones made in a football huddle within a 30-second window. But if stopping play is valuable enough to violate the spirit of sportsmanship, is the idea of using a timeout really so farfetched?
The faking of injuries isn’t something that popped up in 2024. The 2019 LSU Tigers, in all their greatness, struggled to avoid the acting allegations. But those accusations were easily forgotten when Joe Burrow threw bombs to Ja’Marr Chase, Justin Jefferson, and Terrace Marshall.
You may never hear Kirk Herbstreit screaming “time to call a T-O baby” like his ESPN colleague Dick Vitale, but maybe it’s something coaches consider without the ability to tell their charges to drop to the turf to stop play.
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